Mr. Pearce is famous in Arizona for having sent an email to his supporters that included a white nationalist screed, accusing the media of pushing the view, quote, "a world in which every voice proclaims the equality of the races, the inerrant nature of the Jewish, quote, 'Holocaust' tale, the wickedness of attempting to halt the flood of nonwhite aliens pouring across the borders." Mr. Pearce sent that around to all of his supporters, which he later apologized for.

Russell Pearce is also famous for having been caught on tape hugging a neo-Nazi. No, like a real neo-Nazi. Not some sort of metaphorical Godwin's law-invoking neo-Nazi guy, but an actual neo-Nazi guy. You know, with the swastikas?

Russell Pearce is the guy who introduced this radical immigration bill in Arizona that just became law. But if you want to meet the guy who's taking credit for writing the new law, that would be the gentleman named Kris Kobach. Kris Kobach is a birther. He's running for a secretary of state in Kansas right now. His campaign Web site today brags, quote, "Kobach wins one in Arizona."

The guy that helped Arizona's new immigration bill is also an attorney for the Immigration Reform Law Institute. That's the legal arm of an immigration group that's called FAIR, the Federation for American Immigration Reform. FAIR was founded in 1979 by a man named John Tanton. Mr. Tanton is still listed as a member of FAIR's board of directors. Just for some insight into where John Tanton and FAIR were coming from seven years after he started FAIR, Mr. Tanton wrote this, quote, "To govern is to populate. Will the present majority peaceably hand over its political power to a group that is simply more fertile? As whites see their power and control over their lives declining, will they simply go quietly into the night or will there be an explosion?" That's FAIR, who helped write Arizona's anti-immigrant law.

After John Tanton got FAIR off the ground, for nine of the first years of the group's existence, the group reportedly received more than $ 1 million in funding from something called the Pioneer Fund. The Pioneer Fund describes itself as a group formed, quote, "in the Darwinian-Galtonian evolutionary tradition and eugenics movement." For the last 70 years, the Pioneer Fund has funded controversial research about race and intelligence, essentially aimed at proving the racial superiority of white people. The group's original mandate was to promote the genes of those, quote, "deemed to be descended predominantly from white persons who settled in the original 13 states prior to the adoption of the Constitution."

John Tanton's organization, FAIR, which, again, claims credit for writing Arizona's new immigrant law, John Tanton's FAIR was long bankrolled by the Pioneer Fund—which actually makes sense after you read some more of Mr. Tanton's writings. Quote, "I've come to the point of view that for European-American society and culture to persist requires a European-American majority and a clear one at that." In 1997, John Tanton told the "Detroit Free Press" that America will soon be overrun by illegal immigrants, quote, "defecating and creating garbage and looking for jobs." Defecating is the problem, I guess.

Again, this genius is the guy whose group is behind Arizona's new radical immigration law. They take credit for writing it. FAIR is bragging about having, quote, "assisted Senator Russell Pearce in drafting the language" of his Senate bill.

In drafting that language, FAIR may have slipped a little something special in there for themselves. FAIR makes a living off of suing local and state governments over immigration laws. Tucked inside Article VIII of Arizona's new law is a provision that if groups like them win their cases, quote, a judge—sorry—a judge may order that the entity, quote, "who brought the action recover court costs and attorney fees"—which could create a nice financial boon for the formerly eugenics movement-funded, advance the white majority, promote the genetics of white America anti-immigrant group whose attorneys helped write the new law.

So now to my question: Did you know this much about the people who introduced and wrote the bill? You can research any points I made and you will find every single one is factual with hard evidence to support it.

Answer by Senile Cali Gipper
David Duke, is that you?

Answer by Lois Griffin
get a blog.

who has time for this?

Answer by Caribou "QUIT" Barbie™
Yes

I know a lot about him because he was my State Rep when I lived in Arizona. I did not like him at all.

Answer by HATE MALE
i like your user name. i knew some of this. i think this stuff only makes those who support the bill like him more.

Answer by brown9500v13
Both sound like the types that the GOP now embraces.

The Republican party: The wrong-wing of the political spectrum.

Answer by redhotsillypepper
That is a lot of information. The trouble with the new right is that it is giving legitimacy and real power to people who used to be on the fringes of society. This new law is the antithesis of what America should be all about. The irony about the people that support this law that gives the police so much power is that they are the same people that complain the most about government involvement in our lives.

Answer by Goldie
Plagiarism, you. Care to cite this?
Whatever. The ties that bind, eh?
They are hardly any worse than Obama's corrupt cronies.
BTW, Nazis are National Socialists, so they are probably closer to Obama's ideology, anyway.



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